The present invention relates to a method and system for effectively and efficiently delivering financial and/or other transaction-related information to investors while complying with relevant governmental rules and regulations regarding notice, access and proof of delivery. The method and system of the present invention enable individual consent of electronic delivery of financial and/or other transaction-related information from investors and electronically delivering such information and/or documentation to the consented recipients. The system can manage and update investor lists for issuers and/or market intermediaries; prepare financial and other transaction-related information for review; replace or supplement hardcopy documents by disseminating such financial and other transaction-related information through an electronic delivery fulfillment system that complies with governmental rules and regulations; and enable real-time audit tracking of the electronic delivery to confirm both delivery and access of delivered information and to track corrupted electronic deliveries.
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1. A computer program product for identifying consent to an electronic delivery of information, comprising:
a processor having memory wherein the memory stores a computer executable program comprising:
a contact module providing at least one destination of the stored information;
an at least one communication module transmitting to the at least one destination a first communication of an electronic notification of an availability of the stored information and an option to access the stored information;
an at least one consent module for recording a first exercise of the option to access the stored information;
the at least one communication module transmitting to the at least one destination a second communication in response to the first exercise a prompt for consent to an electronic delivery of the stored information;
the at least one consent module recording a second exercise of a granting or denial of the prompted consent;
the at least one communication module transmitting to the at least one destination a third communication in response to the second exercise of the granting of the prompted consent to provide an electronic access to the stored information;
the at least one consent module recording a third exercise of provided electronic access to the stored information; and
the at least one communication module transmitting a fourth communication of the stored information in response to the third exercise; and
a computer readable medium storing the information and communicably linked to the processor.
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This application is a continuation of and claims priority to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/714,934, filed Nov. 18, 2003, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,325,253 entitled “System and Method for Electronic Consent and Delivery of Financial and/or Other Transaction-Related Information,” which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to systems and methods for receiving consents to the electronic receipt of financial and/or other transaction-related information and electronically delivering such information. More specifically, the present invention relates to a method and system for enabling users to electronically consent to the electronic delivery of financial and/or other transaction-related documentation and electronically delivering such documentation to the consented users.
2. Background
In the United States, the offering and sale of new securities are primarily governed by the Securities Act of 1933, which requires the delivery of financial and other pertinent information and/or documentation concerning securities being offered for sale to the investors. Further, the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) is tasked with enforcing the Securities Act of 1933 and other securities laws and regulations.
Traditionally, hard copies of financial information and/or documentation are delivered to investors via paper-based distribution methods such as postal mail. Such traditional methods suffer from a number of drawbacks. First, due to the fluidity of the securities market, there is a constant change of investors of a particular type of securities offering; hence, investor address labels are often outdated for mailing purposes. Second, the printing and shipping of hard copies of financial information and/or documentation added cost and time delay to the overall transaction. Third, when there are document errors, hard copies need to be corrected, reprinted, and reshipped with additional cost and time delay.
The advent of electronic data communication in general, and the Internet particularly, has spawned new electronic distribution methods for the dissemination of information that are faster and more efficient than the traditional paper-based distribution methods. To reconcile and interpret the Securities Act of 1933 in light of the advances in electronic media technology, the SEC issued interpretive releases in October 1995 and April 2000 to provide guidance to securities issuers and investors regarding the delivery of financial and other pertinent information concerning private securities by electronic means.
In the aforementioned interpretive releases, the SEC has analogized the electronic delivery of information to the traditional paper delivery procedures and stated that it “would view information distributed through electronic means as satisfying the delivery and transmission requirements of the federal securities laws if such distribution results in the delivery to the intended recipients of substantially equivalent information as these recipients would have had if the information were delivered to them in paper form.” Hence, fundamentally, the SEC favors the electronic delivery of information to investors when such delivery is comparable to the traditional paper delivery in satisfying the delivery or transmission requirements stated in the Securities Act of 1933 and other federal securities laws.
According to the aforementioned interpretive releases, the issuers and/or market intermediaries (on behalf of the issuers) must comply with three aspects of electronic delivery requirement: notice, access, and evidence of delivery. Regarding the notice aspect, the SEC has stated that the electronic communication should provide “timely and adequate notice to investors that information for them is available.” To that extent, direct notice of the availability of pertinent financial information, such as providing a prospectus by e-mail, will satisfy notice. However, the mere posting of pertinent financial information, such as a prospectus or a final official document, on an Internet web site (analogous to a publication in the newspaper) is insufficient unless investors also receive a separate qualified notice.
Regarding the access aspect, the SEC has stated that investors who are provided information through electronic delivery should have access comparable to that provided by postal mail, wherein “a recipient should have the opportunity to retain the information or having ongoing access equivalent to personal retention.” To that extent, a recipient should have the ability to download and retain a copy of the information in any medium, wherein the particular medium “should not be so burdensome that intended recipients cannot effectively access the information provided.” For instance, a copy of the information can be made available and downloaded in portable document format (PDF) if the recipient is provided with the “necessary software and assistance at no cost.” Likewise, if the information is posted online, the recipient should have access to such information “for as long as the delivery requirement applies.”
Regarding the evidence-of-delivery aspect, the SEC has stated that issuers and others providing electronic delivery of information “should have reason to believe that any electronic means so selected will result in the satisfaction of the delivery requirements.” For instance, this aspect can be satisfied if the issuer obtains “an informed consent from an investor to receive the information through a particular electronic medium.” An informed consent can be: 1) a deal-specific consent, wherein the investor indicates consent to electronically receive particular document(s) or information from a particular issuer; or 2) a global consent, wherein the investor indicates consent to electronically receive any documents from any issuer. In another instance, the evidence-of-delivery aspect can be satisfied if the issuer or the marketing intermediary, on behalf of the issuer, obtains “evidence that an investor actually received the information, for example, by electronic mail return-receipt or confirmation of accessing, downloading, or printing.” Such evidence can be obtained through proper record keeping, including notification when document is available to an investor, and date/time recordation of each delivery to such investor.
The Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board (MSRB), which makes rules regulating dealers who deal in municipal bonds, municipal notes, and other municipal securities, also has guidelines similar to those mentioned above for electronic delivery of financial and other pertinent information concerning municipal securities.
Accordingly, there exists an opportunity to take advantages of the aforementioned guidelines for electronic delivery of financial and/or other transaction-related information and provide market intermediaries and issuers with a system and method for effectively and efficiently delivering financial and other transaction-related information to desired recipients, such as investors, while complying with governing rules and regulations.
The preferred embodiments of the present invention seek the above opportunity by providing a system and method for issuers and/or market intermediaries to receive individual consent of electronic delivery of financial and other transaction-related information from recipients and electronically delivering such information and/or documentation to the consented recipients in a time-efficient and cost-saving manner for issuers and market intermediaries.
The preferred embodiments of the present invention also provide a system and method for: managing and updating investor lists for issuers and/or market intermediaries; preparing financial information for review; replacing or supplementing hardcopy documents by disseminating such financial and other transaction-related information through an electronic delivery fulfillment system that complies with governing rules and regulations; and enabling real-time audit tracking of the electronic delivery to confirm both delivery and access of delivered information and to track corrupted electronic deliveries.
The preferred embodiments of the present invention also provide a system and method for complying with governmental requirements of notice, access, and proof-of-delivery for the electronic delivery of pertinent financial and other transaction-related information by: notifying investors via e-mail with a secure link to information/document residing in a secure site, making available password protection for transactions, and real-time audit tracking of the delivery of the document to investors.
Additional aspects and novel features of the invention will be set forth in part in the description that follows, and in part will become more apparent to those skilled in the art upon examination of the present disclosure.
The preferred embodiments of the present invention are illustrated by way of example and not limited to the following figures:
Reference is now made in detail to embodiments of the present invention, an illustrative example of which is illustrated in the accompanying attachments, showing a method and system for electronically receiving a consent to electronic delivery of financial and other transaction-related information from a recipient and electronically delivering such information to the consented recipient.
Each issuer 121-123 can employ the service of the service provider 110 to manage and update its investor list, with individual investor contact information such as e-mail address, for each of the securities that it issues. For instance, an issuer 121 can transmit the investor list and periodic updates of such list to the service provider 110 via the data network 150 in a manner known in the art. Alternatively, the service provider 110 can obtain the investor list and any updates directly from the investors 101-103 on behalf of the issuer 121. The service provider 110 can store the investor list in a database on its computer or server in a manner known in the art for electronic information storage. The service provider 110 can then provide the issuer 121 with the ability to maintain and manage its investor list by providing the list with editing capability through a user interface, such as a web site, an example of which is shown in
When an issuer 121 wishes to electronically deliver particular financial and/or other transaction-related information, such as preliminary offering documents, supplemental offering documents, or final official statements, the service provider 110 can initiate the electronic delivery process as described below.
First, the service provider 110 receives the information to be delivered, e.g., a prospectus, from an issuer 121 which wishes to send the prospectus to potential investors 101-103. The service provider 110 then prepares the document for electronic delivery and forwards an electronic notification, such as an e-mail notification, directly to each of the investors 101-103, based on investor information obtained from the aforementioned investor list.
Once an investor 101 clicks on the web address 220, the investor is directed to a first secure electronic site maintained by the service provider 110 in its server. The first secure web site can be a private-label download page as shown in
Once the investor 101 clicks on the link 320 in
While the investor 101 is provided with an electronic site showing an electronic version of the offering document, the issuer 121 is provided with a separate private-label electronic maintenance site for tracking the viewing of its offering documents by investors. The site can be password protected for the issuer 121 to ensure the confidentiality of the issuer's or the market intermediary's business deals.
Once the investor 101 clicks on the consent button 920, the investor is directed to a private label download page like that shown in
To fulfill the evidence-of-delivery aspect of the electronic delivery requirement, the issuer 121 can be directed from the private-label maintenance site in
Although deal-specific consent for the electronic delivery of a particular financial or other transaction-related document has been described thus far, it should be understood from the present disclosure that the aforementioned embodiments are also applicable for global consent to electronic delivery of multiple documents from any one or more issuers. For instance, the text message in the e-mail notification of
Although the invention has been described with reference to these preferred embodiments, other embodiments could be made by those in the art to achieve the same or similar results. Variations and modifications of the present invention will be apparent to one skilled in the art based on this disclosure, and the present invention encompasses all such modifications and equivalents.
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